SHARE
COPY LINK

HOLCIM

Holcim and Lafarge cement new merger deal

Swiss-based Holcim and French-based Lafarge say they have repaired cracks that threatened to collapse their merger to create the world's biggest cement company.

Holcim and Lafarge cement new merger deal
Photos: AFP

"The Boards of Directors of Holcim and Lafarge are pleased to announce that they have reached an agreement on revised terms for the merger of equals between both companies," the said in a joint statement released on Friday.
   
Last year the two companies announced plans to create a cement titan employing more than 130,000 people, which would generate annual sales of €32 billion euros ($34 billion) and underlying profits of €6.5 billion — a major event in the global construction industry.

But with the sharp rise in the Swiss franc having driven up Holcim's value since the merger was agreed last year, the Swiss company said on Sunday that the terms of one Holcim share for one Lafarge share was no longer appropriate.

The companies agreed on a new exchange ratio of nine Holcim shares for ten Lafarge shares, although this is not as favourable as the Swiss company had sought.
   
Holcim's bid to sideline the chief executive of France's Lafarge, Bruno Lafont, one of the architects of the merger, only partially succeeded.
   
Holcim's executives apparently didn't appreciate Lafont's hands-on and centralized management style, and he agreed to give up the chief executive post to ensure the merger went forward.
   
Instead Lafont and Holcim board chairman Wolfgang Reitzle will both become non-executive co-chairmen of the merged company's board.
   
Lafarge will soon propose a candidate for chief executive, to be accepted by Holcim's board, the companies said the statement.
   
Lafarge shares shot up 3.0 percent to 64.16 in midday trading while Paris' CAC 40 index was up 0.52 percent overall.
   
Holcim's shares rose 0.92 percent to 76.50 francs while the Swiss SMI index showed a gain of 0.32 percent.

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

LAFARGE

Yazidi women want to join court case against French cement giant

Yazidi women who survived rape and slavery at the hands of the Islamic State group in Iraq and Syria have applied to join in a court case against French multinational cement giant Lafarge, accused of paying millions to jihadist groups including Islamic State (Isis), the women's lawyers said Friday.

Yazidi women want to join court case against French cement giant
A February 2018 photo of the Lafarge Cement Syria (LCS) plant at Jalabiya in northern Syria. Photo: AFP

They have made an application to be “civil parties” in a criminal case brought in France against Lafarge and several of its executives for complicity in crimes against humanity and financing a terrorist organisation, the lawyers said in a statement.

Lafarge allegedly made multi-million dollar payments to Islamic State in order to continue operations at one of its cement plants in northern Syria in 2013.

This allegedly included payments by Lafarge for large amounts of oil, one of Isis’ main revenue sources.

French investigative judges indicted Lafarge in June 2018, and eight of its executives were charged in 2017.

Amal Clooney, wife of actor George Clooney, and one of the counsels for the victims, said the case would allow Yazidi women “to have their voices heard in a court of law”.

“Since August 2014, Isis has targeted Yazidis in Iraq and Syria through forced displacement, executions, kidnappings, and the sexual enslavement of women and girls,” she said.

This case “provides an opportunity to establish that Isis, and all those who assisted them, will be held to account for their crimes, and that victims will be awarded just compensation.

“And it sends an important message to corporations that are complicit in the commission of international crimes that they will face legal consequences for their actions,” she added.

Lafarge is suspected of paying nearly 13 million euros to Isis and other militant groups to keep the Jalabiya plant running long after other French companies had pulled out of Syria.

The payments by the Lafarge Cement Syria (LCS) subsidiary were considered a “tax” in exchange for which militants allowed free movement of the company's staff and goods inside the warzone, according to investigators.

A source close to the probe said investigators also suspect that Lafarge sold cement to Isis.

READ ALSO: French firm Lafarge charged with complicity in crimes against humanity in Syria

SHOW COMMENTS